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The Challenges of Economic Maturity: New England, 1880-1940 Joshua L. Rosenbloom University of Kansas and National Bureau of Economic Research November 23, 1998 Prepared for delivery at a conference at the Boston Federal Reserve Bank, October 2, 1998, and inclusion in Peter Temin (ed.), The Economic History of New England (tentative title). I am indebted to Louis Cain, Dora Costa, Price Fishback, Claudia Goldin, Morton Keller, Naomi Lamoreaux, Marcus McCorison, Mary Rosenbloom, Steven Sass, Kenneth Snowden, Peter Temin, Tom Weiss, Gavin Wright, and Eugene White for their advice and comments. 1 Introduction By 1880 the rapid growth of manufacturing industries in New England had created an urban and industrialized economy substantially different from the rest of the country. If the years before 1880 had been ones of divergence from the national pattern, however, the 60 years after 1880 were ones of convergence. After the Civil War, the rapid expansion of rail and telegraph networks gave birth to an increasingly unified national economy. As population and industry spread into the interior of the country, the gap that had previously emerged between New England and the rest of the nation narrowed. The erosion of the region’s industrial leadership was especially pronounced in textiles, and boots and shoes—the industries largely responsible for New England’s early industrialization. By the 1950s, the region’s relatively poor economic performance had become the subject of a growing literature seeking to identify the causes of regional decline and offer suggestions about how to remedy the problem.1 With hindsight it is apparent that the pessimism of many of the studies of the 1950s was overstated.2 Despite the relatively slow growth of the textile and boot and shoe industries from 1880 to 1920, and their absolute decline in the 1920s and 1930s, other manufacturing industries were expanding and the service sector was assuming a new level of prominence as a source of regional growth. There can be little question that the declining fortunes of mill towns tied to the 1 Prominent among these studies are Harris (1952), Handlin (1950); National Planning Association (1954); 2 It is worth noting that even in the 1950s pessimism was not unanimous. Howard Mumford Jones (1950) for example argued that it was New England’s prominence in the 1870s that had been anomalous and that the subsequent period had been one of “readjustment, as New England slowly assumes its more modest, but secure, place in the economy of a continental nation.” Even more pessimistic writers, like Harris (1952, p. 8) conceded that so far New England’s decline had been only in relative terms. But he argued that unless action was taken to reverse this course, the decline would continue. 2 textile and boot and shoe industries produced pockets of unemployment and poverty, but overall New England’s economy had continued to grow at a respectable rate between 1880 and 1940. This essay offers an account of the complex changes taking place within New England in the years after 1880, as the region adjusted to its changing position within the U.S. economy and responded to the social and political challenges posed by industrialization and urbanization. Although the forces influencing the region’s economic development in this period were increasingly national or international in scope, their impact on the region was mediated by the unique set of assets—both physical and human—that had been accumulated as a result of New England’s prior history. Most importantly, the region’s early leadership in the development of textiles, boots and shoes, and machinery had encouraged the concentration of skilled labor and physical capital specific to these industries. The impact of subsequent events on these relatively immobile factors of production was largely responsible for the unique features of New England’s economic history in the post-1880 period. After 1880 a variety of developments began to erode New England’s competitiveness in textiles and footwear, slowing the pace of regional economic growth and prompting a gradual reallocation of labor and capital into other areas of manufacturing—especially the machinery industry—and the service sector. Although the region’s growth failed to keep pace with the rest of the nation, the impact of this slowdown on living standards was limited by the increasingly national scope of labor and capital markets. As the demand for labor weakened, the net migration flow into the region slowed, helping to maintain wage levels. Meanwhile, New Englanders’ investments in ventures outside the region allowed them to participate in the 3 economic opportunities created by the more rapid growth of other regions.3 As long as adjustments could be made on the margin by varying the rate of migration into the region the negative shocks to textiles and boots and shoes were not especially painful. After 1920, however, the shocks to the region’s leading manufacturers intensified significantly, resulting for the first time in a reduction in the absolute size of the manufacturing sector. The result was high and sustained unemployment in communities dependent on these industries. These regionally specific problems were compounded in the 1930s by the onset of the Great Depression. Although the growth of employment outside textiles and boots and shoes was not enough to offset the shocks experienced by these industries after 1920, the continued strength of the region’s machinery industry and the expansion of the region’s institutions of higher education were laying the foundations for post-war expansion. Meanwhile, the region’s service sector absorbed a growing share of the labor force. During the 1930s, non-manufacturing employment fell less, and recovered more quickly in New England than in other parts of the country. The remainder of this essay is organized in five sections. The first section offers an overview of the structure and growth of the New England economy from 1880 to 1940. This description highlights both the distinctive characteristics of the region in comparison with the rest of the country, and the pronounced variation in the character and development of the six states that make up the region. The next three sections parallel the last three sections of Temin’s essay, examining in turn the history of the manufacturing sector, and the operation of the region’s labor and capital markets. The primary focus of the second section is on the declining 3 It is interesting to contrast New England’s experience in this period with that of the post-bellum southern United States. Wright (1986) has argued that one of the chief reasons for the persistence of low incomes in the South was the isolation of the region’s labor and capital markets from the rest of the country. 4 fortunes of the textile and footwear industries, and their responses to the shifting pattern of comparative advantage that emerged in this period. A secondary theme, however, is the continued strength of the region’s machinery industry, and the growing importance of institutions of higher education to the New England economy. The third and fourth sections describe New England’s labor and capital markets, respectively. The development of efficient institutions for the mobilization of these inputs to production is a crucial factor in sustaining economic growth. As Rothenberg’s essay has pointed out, the emergence of regionally unified labor and capital markets was a crucial ingredient in the transformation of the New England economy in the post-Revolutionary period. A century later, the continuing expansion of factor markets meant that the region was increasingly integrated within national and even international labor and capital markets. The third section explores the ways in which this increasing geographic integration affected New England’s work force. The fourth section describes the impact of financial market integration. The final section of the essay explores the impact on the regional economy of an event with no parallel before or since: the Great Depression. An Overview of the New England Economy The growth of manufacturing in New England prior to 1880 had created a distinctive regional economy substantially different from that of the rest of the nation. Most striking was the heavy concentration of manufacturing within the region. Although it accounted for just 8 percent of the U.S. population, New England was home to more than 20 percent of the nation’s manufacturing workers. Over 40 percent of the region’s labor force was employed in 5 manufacturing (compared to about 20 percent nationally), while agriculture employed only about one of every five workers (compared to one of every two nationally).4 New England’s manufacturing sector in turn was dominated by a few key industries. As Table 1 shows, in 1880 textiles employed more than one-third of all manufacturing workers in the region, while leather and leather products—dominated by footwear producers—employed another 14 percent of the region’s manufacturing labor force. While these industries dominated regional employment totals, the table also shows that they were highly concentrated within the region. In 1880 more than one half of all textile workers in the country and over 40 percent of leather and leather products workers were employed in New England. But even these figures understate the extent of industrial localization. Nearly 80 percent of New England’s textile manufacturing capacity, for example, was concentrated within an arc of land roughly 20 to 60 miles from Boston (Heckman 1980, p. 704). Other important employers in the region included apparel producers, lumber and wood products, and precision metal working industries (non-electrical machinery, fabricated metals, and instruments). Together the precision metal working industries accounted for close to12 percent of regional employment in 1880. In contrast to the textile and leather and leather products industries, however, none of these industries was especially highly concentrated within the region.
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